State ex rel. Wood v. Board of Liquidation

40 La. Ann. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1888
DocketNo. 10,002
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 La. Ann. 398 (State ex rel. Wood v. Board of Liquidation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Wood v. Board of Liquidation, 40 La. Ann. 398 (La. 1888).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This is a proceeding by mandamus on the part of a holder of bonds of the city of New Orleans, bearing date July 1, 1884, and which were issued under and in pursuance of Act 67 of 1884, to coerce the Board of Liquidation to comply with its terms, and particularly with those of Sections 3 and 4.

Kelator avers that it is the respondent’s duty to apply, in the manner therein specified, the revenues, property and assets of the city to the payment of the interest and the redemption and cancellation of, the -capital of his bonds.

He further avers that it is the duty of respondent to advertise for sealed proposals for the exchange of drawn premium, bonds in the possession of the city for the bonds issued under said act to the amount of $50,000, after each allotment of series ; and that as said statute has been in force since the date of its passage, on the 9th of July, 1884, and all the bonds in contemplation thereof have been issued, there should.'woiu be advertised for exchange, in accordance with Sections 3 and 4 of said act, for the various series allotted after that date, and regularly hereafter, bonds to the amount of $50,000 to each allotment of series within that time.

He further avers that the respondent is in possession of funds in excess of the interest due on said bonds, and, also, in excess, of the amount that is necessary to carry out the provisions of said act, and its failure to do so is a plain violation of law and an impairment of his contract in the sense of the State and Federal Constitutions.

The respondent’s return is elabórate, and we make the following synopsis of it, viz :

That the premium bonds were given in exchange for other valid bonds of the city that were issued under laws anterior in date to the enactment of the premium bond act, on the 6th of March, 1876, and which pledged and dedicated to their payment adequate and sufficient ■taxes.

For their discharge, on the premium plan, a five mill tax was authorized and consecrated thereto, and on the faith of it they were [400]*400surrendered and funded to the extent of $13,000,000, and of which there are extant about $8,000,000 at this time.

That the premium bond act provided that this bonded debt aggregating $20,000,000, when exchanged for premium bonds of $20 each, should be divided into 10,000 series of 100 bonds each, the whole to be numbered from 1 to 10,000. That a certain amount of those series should be annually paid, in pursuance of an allotment made from the numbers of all the series, and that premiums should be awarded on the bonds of the drawn series in a similar manner.

That, as all of said bondholders had not participated in the plan and funded their bonds, all of the series drawn at the different allotments did not pass into the hands of holders, but near $8,000,000' thereof remained in the possession of the city; that the premium bond tax, to the extent it would have been applied to its proportion of the premium bonds, constituted, in contemplation of the premium bond act, a surplus represented by the draw» premium bonds in the possession of the city, and that this surplus was, by the terms of the act,, dedicated to the payment of these unfunded bonds, or exchanged therefor.

That the bonds contemplated by the premium bond act were binding contracts between the city and bondholdei’s, and the adequate and sufficient taxes dedicated to their payment by the laws under which they were issued were enforceable and valid.

That in 1882 the Legislature made further provision for those unfunded bonds by authorizing the issuance of another class of bonds therefor, known as extended consolidated and certificate bonds, to the payment of which an additional five mill tax was dedicated, and said surplus of the premium bond tax was pledged; that on the faith of said pledge and dedication $5,000,000 of same were exchanged therefor, and are still extant, and solely dependent thereon for payment and to which they have a vested right.

That of said bonds there are remaining unfunded, under either act, $3,000,000, which are still entitled to claim the benefits of both and to participate in said tax and surplus, and which right the Legislature by any subsequent act is impotent to impair or take away.

That, in pursuance of the statutes of 1876 and 1882, the city has levied and is annually levying a one per cent tax for the exclusive benefit of all of said bondholders, whether their bonds have been funded or not; and, as it is charged with the custody and application of the proceeds thereof, it is wholly without power to divert them to any other object.

That Act 67 of 1884 provides for the issuance of bonds into which [401]*401are to be funded judgment or floating debts — as contradistinguished from contraet or bonded debts — aggregating $900,000 in amount, the greater part of which has been created since 1873, and no part of wiiich was contracted prior to 1870, which was originally entitled to no special or sufficient tax for their payment, but which were wholly dependent upon the adequacy of the annual revenues for their discharge, and which are not entitled to participate in the one per cent tax.

That said act, in providing for an exchange of drawn premium bonds in the possession of the city for said floating debt bonds, undertakes, in effect, to appropriate to the latter in advance of their maturities the said surplus to the extent of $200,000 annually, or $500,000 for the time which has elapsed since the passage of the act, to the prejudice of the contract creditors of the city ; and that this will the more clearly appear from the fact that respondent has in hand neither funds or property of the city — such as is mentioned in the act — with which to pay any part of said floating debt bonds.

That the amount of the premium bonds to be annually paid is annually increasing in value, and hence the proportion of the five mill tax applicable to the payment of each succeeding drawn series thereof is annually increasing to such an extent that the aggregate yearly excess is less than $80,000; therefore, if drawn premium bonds in possession of the city are given in exchange for floating debt bonds to the amount required, not only would the surplus be consumed, but the proceeds of the premium bond tax would be absorbed, and the premium bond holders and the holders of bonds not funded would be deprived of the amount annually due them therefrom.

Finally, the respondent returns that the Act of 1884 is, in effect, an attempt to divert and misapply the one per cent tax in contravention of the pledges contained in prior laws, and, is enforced, contracts made in pursuance thereof will be impaired in the sense of the State and Federal Constitutions.

The Sun Mutual Insurance Company intervened and joined the respondent in resisting the enforcement of the Act of 1884.

It claims to be the holder of certain extended, consolidated and certificate bonds of 1882; and contends that, if said act is carried into effect, its contracts under various other and prior laws, enacted in 1852, 1854, 1869, 1870, 1871, 1873 and 1876 — under which the bonds given in exchange were authorized and issued — as well as those under [402]

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Related

State ex rel. Hubert v. Mayor of New Orleans
44 So. 321 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1907)
City of Huron v. Second Ward Sav. Bank
86 F. 272 (Eighth Circuit, 1898)
United States ex rel. Siegel v. Board of Liquidation of City Debt
73 F. 769 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 La. Ann. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wood-v-board-of-liquidation-la-1888.